Salou · Costa Daurada, Tarragona

A cosy little cannabis club in the woods of Salou

Pooh CSC is a private, members-only social club for grown-up honey-lovers. Calm, kind and discreet — the way a good club, and a good day in the Hundred Acre Wood, ought to be.

  • Adults only

    18+ members

  • Members only

    Private association

  • Non-profit

    Sin ánimo de lucro

  • Discreet

    Quiet & private

A friendly storybook honey bear sitting in a sunny meadow, hugging a honey pot, with a red balloon drifting nearby
A cosy hollow-tree clubhouse glowing with lantern light in a whimsical woodland
The club

What exactly is a cannabis social club?

A Spanish CSC isn't a dispensary and it isn't a shop. It's a private club you belong to — closer to a members' association than anything you can walk in off the street and buy from.

  • A non-profit association

    Pooh CSC is a private members' association — an asociación sin ánimo de lucro — not a shop or a dispensary. Nothing is sold to the public and no profit is made.

  • A closed, members-only circle

    Membership is by introduction and is for adults who already consume. Clubs do not advertise to or recruit non-users — that is how the model stays within the law.

  • Private premises, real discretion

    Everything happens inside the club's private space among registered members. We ask everyone to be calm, kind and discreet out in the world — like a good neighbour in the Hundred Acre Wood.

How to join

Four gentle steps into the club

No queues, no fuss. Just a friendly process to make sure everyone who joins is a grown-up who'll fit right in.

  1. 1

    Say hello

    Reach out and tell us a little about yourself. Membership is by invitation, so an introduction from an existing member helps.

  2. 2

    Prove you're an adult

    You must be 18 or older and already a cannabis consumer. We'll verify your age with valid ID — no exceptions.

  3. 3

    Become a member

    Sign the association's statutes, register your details and pay your annual membership. Welcome to the club.

  4. 4

    Enjoy, kindly

    Relax in the private space, meet fellow members, and keep things calm and discreet. Honey optional.

Woodland animal friends sharing a pot of honey and tea around a table, lanterns glowing overhead

Better with friends.

Request access
Your rights · Tus derechos

Stopped by the police in Spain? Here's how to stay calm

Knowing what to do turns a scary moment into a manageable one. This is a friendly, plain-English guide to your rights during a police stop in Spain — keep it in your back pocket.

General information, not legal advice. Laws change — see the note at the bottom of the page.

A calm storybook bear politely talking with a friendly woodland constable on a country lane at dusk
  1. Stay calm and be polite

    Keep your hands visible and your tone friendly. Most stops in Spain are routine identity checks. Calm and courteous always goes further than confrontation.

    “Buenas. ¿En qué puedo ayudarle?”Hi. How can I help you?

  2. You do have to identify yourself

    In Spain you are legally required to identify yourself to the police. Carry your DNI, NIE or passport. Refusing to identify yourself can mean being taken to the station.

    “Aquí tiene mi documento.”Here is my ID.

  3. Ask whether you're detained

    You can calmly ask if this is just an identity check or a detention, and what the reason is. Knowing which one it is tells you what your rights are.

    “¿Estoy detenido o es una identificación?”Am I being detained, or is this an ID check?

  4. If they search you (un cacheo)

    Police can pat you down when there is a reasonable motive. You can state out loud that you do not consent, but never physically resist or obstruct — that only makes things worse.

    “No doy mi consentimiento, pero no me resisto.”I don't consent, but I'm not resisting.

  5. Know the difference: private vs public

    Personal cannabis use in a private space is not a crime in Spain, but use or possession in public is an administrative offence (the “Ley Mordaza”, Ley 4/2015) — usually a fine, not a criminal record. Keep it private.

  6. Silence and a lawyer are your right

    Beyond identifying yourself you can stay silent, and if you are detained you have the right to a lawyer and an interpreter. Don't sign anything you don't fully understand.

    “Quiero hablar con un abogado.”I want to speak to a lawyer.

Do

  • Carry valid ID at all times
  • Stay calm, polite and unhurried
  • Keep your hands visible
  • Note the officers' badge numbers if something feels wrong

Don't

  • Don't run, resist or get physical
  • Don't lie or give false details
  • Don't argue or raise your voice in the street
  • Don't sign or admit to anything you don't understand
Good questions

Frequently asked

Come and say hello

If you're 18 or over and looking for a calm, friendly club in Salou, the door is open. Send a note and we'll take it from there.